Afghanistan

In Afghanistan, the US and the UK have relied increasingly on RPAs as the conflict has progressed. According to the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) there has been a steady recorded rise in the number of weapons released by RPA's between 2009 and 2012. Figures released by USAF in November 2012 confirm this. The number of RPA weapons releases rose from 294 in 2011 to 447 during the first 11 months of 2012. According to data released by CENTCOM in January 2013 RPAs then accounted for one in four of all ISAF air weapon releases. UK Reapers alone have flown over 46,000 hours in Afghanistan, averaging three sorties per day. As of the end of July 2013 there had been a total of 405 weapons discharged by UK operated RPAs in Afghanistan.

The first RPA-related civilian casualties were reported in February 2002. However, official estimates have not, until recently, disaggregated casualties by reference to the type of air platform used. At the end of 2012 UNAMA released disaggregated figures for the first time. These recorded 16 civilians killed and five injured due to confirmed RPA strikes during the course of the year. In its latest published figures, covering the first six months of 2013, UNAMA documented 15 civilian deaths and seven injuries in seven separate attacks by RPAs targeting anti-government forces.1 UNAMA acknowledges that these figures may be an under-estimate, but assesses that in recent years at least, confirmed RPA strikes appear to have inflicted lower levels of civilian casualties than aerial attacks carried out by other air platforms.2

The UK has reported only one incident in which four civilians were killed and two civilians injured in an RPA strike by the Royal Air Force (RAF) in Afghanistan on 25 March 2011. The incident was investigated by the Joint Incident Assessment Team (JIAT) at ISAF which concluded that the operation had been directed at two pick-up trucks believed to be carrying explosives, and found that the actions of the crew had been in accordance with the applicable rules of engagement.3 The US has also partially declassified the findings of one investigation report concerning an incident on 21 February 2010 in which 23 civilians were reportedly killed as the result of an attack on a convoy in which a Predator crew was found to have provided misleading situational information. The report found evidence of inaccurate and unprofessional reporting by the Predator crew, and a predisposition to engage in kinetic activity (the release of a missile). It recommended administrative and disciplinary sanctions.4

Since October 2013, the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) has reported a significant rise in confirmed civilian casualties reportedly caused by attacks in which remotely piloted aircraft were implicated. In its 2013 report, Afghanistan Annual Report on Protection of Civilians in Armed Conflict5, UNAMA records 59 civilian casualties during 2013 as the result of 19 confirmed drone strikes6 (comprising 45 civilian fatalities and 14 non-fatal injuries). As compared with 2012, this represents a three-fold increase in the number of reported civilian casualties from the use of drones by ISAF.